Tuesday

Apr 19, 2016 at 2:22 AM

WASHINGTON — With an urgency driven by President Barack Obama’s dwindling number of days left in office, supporters of the missing U.S. journalist Austin Tice gathered Monday outside the White House calling for the administration to make his release a priority before the president’s term expires.

WASHINGTON — With an urgency driven by President Barack Obama’s dwindling number of days left in office, supporters of the missing U.S. journalist Austin Tice gathered Monday outside the White House calling for the administration to make his release a priority before the president’s term expires.

Tice, now 34, a U.S. Marine-turned-journalist who reported for outlets including McClatchy and The Washington Post, vanished in Syria in August 2012. Apart from a video clip showing him in the custody of unknown gunmen shortly after his disappearance, there’s been no confirmed sighting of Tice since. With his whereabouts still a mystery, Tice joins hundreds of Syrians who have simply disappeared in the midst of the country’s bloody, 5-year-old civil war.

"Regardless of what happens in the hopeful resolution of the Syrian conflict, we know without question that President Obama only has a few months left, and we’d like to see Austin’s return happen before he’s gone," said Marc Tice, Austin’s father, speaking from the family’s home in Texas.

Tice’s family and supporters say a confluence of recent events lends a renewed energy to the campaign to find and free him: Syria’s release of another long-held American, the hardening of the Syrian conflict and the chance of a new U.S. administration with personnel and policy changes that could affect Tice’s case. The Facebook page for Monday’s rally outside the White House called on participants to "tell President Obama not to leave Austin behind!"

Tice’s parents were unable to attend the rally, which was organized mainly by Barbara Feinman Todd, director of the journalism program at Georgetown University, and one of her students, Emily Kaye. Reporters Without Borders, an international advocacy group for journalists that runs an awareness campaign on Tice’s case, also participated.

Tice attended Georgetown law school before taking off to try freelance reporting in Syria; his case is well known among his fellow Georgetown students, especially law and journalism students. Students were asked to wear masks over their eyes to symbolize the public’s blindness when journalists are stopped from working because of violence.

"It’s very real to them," said Feinman Todd of her students. "It’s not only a story they click on online. They’ve seen his parents up onstage. They’ve met his parents."

One concern among Tice’s supporters is that the Obama administration’s early, activist role in the Syrian conflict, calling for the resignation of President Bashar Assad and supporting the insurgency, has gradually moved into a hands-off approach as regime change becomes a distant prospect. Tice’s family wants to keep pressure on U.S. officials to work closely with Syria as well as other stakeholders — such as regime backers Russia and Iran — to locate their son.

"They just held parliamentary elections. Clearly, there’s a functioning government there in spite of the conflict and one of the duties of a functioning government is to assist in locating missing persons, especially foreign nationals," Marc Tice said. "We still hold that they should be doing everything that they can to repatriate Austin, and that’s something the United States, Russia and others can remind them of."

There are few known clues as to the identity of Tice’s captors. His satellite phone, which he used to communicate with editors and his family in Houston, last transmitted in the afternoon, Syrian time, on Aug. 13, 2012. The Tices think their son was kidnapped the next day as he began a trip that was to have taken him from south of Damascus to Beirut, the Lebanese capital.

The only news of him since has been a video that was posted to YouTube on Sept. 26, 2012, showing Tice blindfolded and distressed as he’s being led up a hillside by gunmen. The video breaks off as he’s heard speaking broken Arabic, then saying, "Jesus. Oh, Jesus."

Analysts doubt the circumstances depicted in the video, saying it appeared to be a Syrian government ploy to blame the kidnapping on Islamist extremists. Neither U.S. officials nor the Tices believe the Islamic State extremist group has custody of him; the group typically announces its Western captives in propaganda videos.

The Syrian regime repeatedly has said it isn’t holding Tice and has no knowledge of his whereabouts. As recently as last week, Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad told an Associated Press reporter that the government wasn’t holding Tice, had no information about him and that Tice wasn’t thought even to be in Syria. There was no elaboration on those points and the statements weren’t taken too seriously; the Foreign Ministry doesn’t take the lead in sensitive security matters in Syria.

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